Competitive Reactions
during Ethanol Chain Elongation
Were Temporarily Suppressed by Increasing Hydrogen Partial Pressure
through Methanogenesis Inhibition
posted on 2023-02-15, 15:05authored byShilva Shrestha, Siqi Xue, Lutgarde Raskin
Organic waste streams can be converted into high-value
platform
chemicals such as medium-chain carboxylic acids (MCCAs) using mixed
microbial communities via chain elongation. However, the heterogeneity
of waste streams and the use of complex microbial communities can
lead to undesirable reactions, thus decreasing process efficiency.
We explored suppressing excessive ethanol oxidation to acetate (EEO)
by increasing the hydrogen partial pressure (PH2) through
hydrogenotrophic methanogenesis inhibition by periodically adding
2-bromoethanesulfonate (2-BES) to an MCCA-producing bioreactor to
reach 10 mM of 2-BES upon addition. The bioreactor was fed with pretreated
food waste and brewery waste containing high concentrations of short-chain
carboxylic acids and ethanol, respectively. While 2-BES addition initially
reduced EEO, some methanogens (Methanobrevibacter spp.) persisted and resistant populations were selected over time.
Besides changing the methanogenic community structure, adding 2-BES
also changed the bacterial community structure due to its impact on
PH2. While we demonstrated that PH2 could be
manipulated using 2-BES to control EEO, methods that do not require
the addition of a chemical inhibitor should be explored to maintain
optimum PH2 for long-term suppression of EEO.